Of The Epidemics

Hippocrates

Translated by Francis Adams

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Table of Contents

Of the Epidemics

BOOK I.

Sect. I. First Constitution

1. IN THASUS, about the autumn equinox, and under the Pleiades, the rains were abundant, constant, and soft, with
southerly winds; the winter southerly, the northerly winds faint, droughts; on the whole, the winter having the
character of spring. The spring was southerly, cool, rains small in quantity. Summer, for the most part, cloudy, no
rain, the Etesian winds, rare and small, blew in an irregular manner. The whole constitution of the season being thus
inclined to the southerly, and with droughts early in the spring, from the preceding opposite and northerly state,
ardent fevers occurred in a few instances, and these very mild, being rarely attended with hemorrhage, and never
proving fatal. Swellings appeared about the ears, in many on either side, and in the greatest number on both sides,
being unaccompanied by fever so as not to confine the patient to bed; in all cases they disappeared without giving
trouble, neither did any of them come to suppuration, as is common in swellings from other causes. They were of a lax,
large, diffused character, without inflammation or pain, and they went away without any critical sign. They seized
children, adults, and mostly those who were engaged in the exercises of the palestra and gymnasium, but seldom attacked
women. Many had dry coughs without expectoration, and accompanied with hoarseness of voice. In some instances earlier,
and in others later, inflammations with pain seized sometimes one of the testicles, and sometimes both; some of these
cases were accompanied with fever and some not; the greater part of these were attended with much suffering. In other
respects they were free of disease, so as not to require medical assistance.

2. Early in the beginning of spring, and through the summer, and towards winter, many of those who had been long
gradually declining, took to bed with symptoms of phthisis; in many cases formerly of a doubtful character the disease
then became confirmed; in these the constitution inclined to the phthisical. Many, and, in fact, the most of them,
died; and of those confined to bed, I do not know if a single individual survived for any considerable time; they died
more suddenly than is common in such cases. But other diseases, of a protracted character, and attended with fever,
were well supported, and did not prove fatal: of these we will give a description afterwards. Consumption was the most
considerable of the diseases which then prevailed, and the only one which proved fatal to many persons. Most of them
were affected by these diseases in the following manner: fevers accompanied with rigors, of the continual type, acute,
having no complete intermissions, but of the form of the semi-tertians, being milder the one day, and the next having
an exacerbation, and increasing in violence; constant sweats, but not diffused over the whole body; extremities very
cold, and warmed with difficulty; bowels disordered, with bilious, scanty, unmixed, thin, pungent, and frequent
dejections. The urine was thin, colorless, unconcocted, or thick, with a deficient sediment, not settling favorably,
but casting down a crude and unseasonable sediment. Sputa small, dense, concocted, but brought up rarely and with
difficulty; and in those who encountered the most violent symptoms there was no concoction at all, but they continued
throughout spitting crude matters. Their fauces, in most of them, were painful from first to last, having redness with
inflammation; defluxions thin, small and acrid; they were soon wasted and became worse, having no appetite for any kind
of food throughout; no thirst; most persons delirious when near death. So much concerning the phthisical
affections.

3. In the course of the summer and autumn many fevers of the continual type, but not violent; they attacked persons
who had been long indisposed, but who were otherwise not in an uncomfortable state. In most cases the bowels were
disordered in a very moderate degree, and they did not suffer thereby in any manner worth mentioning; the urine was
generally well colored, clear, thin, and after a time becoming concocted near the crisis. They had not much cough, nor
it troublesome; they were not in appetite, for it was necessary to give them food (on the whole, persons laboring under
phthisis were not affected in the usual manner). They were affected with fevers, rigors, and deficient sweats, with
varied and irregular paroxysms, in general not intermitting, but having exacerbations in the tertian form. The earliest
crisis which occurred was about the twentieth day, in most about the fortieth, and in many about the eightieth. But
there were cases in which it did not leave them thus at all, but in an irregular manner, and without any crisis; in
most of these the fevers, after a brief interval, relapsed again; and from these relapses they came to a crisis in the
same periods; but in many they were prolonged so that the disease was not gone at the approach of winter. Of all those
which are described under this constitution, the phthisical diseases alone were of a fatal character; for in all the
others the patients bore up well, and did not die of the other fevers.

Sect. II. Second Constitution

1. In Thasus, early in autumn, the winter suddenly set in rainy before the usual time, with much northerly and
southerly winds. These things all continued so during the season of the Pleiades, and until their setting. The winter
was northerly, the rains frequent, in torrents, and large, with snow, but with a frequent mixture of fair weather.
These things were all so, but the setting in of the cold was not much out of season. After the winter solstice, and at
the time when the zephyr usually begins to blow, severe winterly storms out of season, with much northerly wind, snow,
continued and copious rains; the sky tempestuous and clouded; these things were protracted, and did not remit until the
equinox. The spring was cold, northerly, rainy, and clouded; the summer was not very sultry, the Etesian winds blew
constant, but quickly afterwards, about the rising of Arcturus, there were again many rains with north winds. The whole
season being wet, cold, and northerly, people were, for the most part, healthy during winter; but early in the spring
very many, indeed, the greater part, were valetudinary. At first ophthalmies set in, with rheums, pains, unconcocted
discharges, small concretions, generally breaking with difficulty, in most instances they relapsed, and they did not
cease until late in autumn. During summer and autumn there were dysenteric affections, attacks of tenesmus and
lientery, bilious diarrhoea, with thin, copious, undigested, and acrid dejections, and sometimes with watery stools;
many had copious defluxions, with pain, of a bilious, watery, slimy, purulent nature, attended with strangury, not
connected with disease of the kidneys, but one complaint succeeding the other; vomitings of bile, phlegm, and
undigested food, sweats, in all cases a reduncance of humors. In many instances these complaints were unattended with
fever, and did not prevent the patients from walking about, but some cases were febrile, as will be described. In some
all those described below occurred with pain. During autumn, and at the commencement of winter, there were phthisical
complaints, continual fevers; and, in a few cases, ardent; some diurnal, others nocturnal, semi-tertians, true
tertians, quartans, irregular fevers.

2. All these fevers described attacked great numbers. All these fevers attacked the smallest numbers, and the
patients suffered the least from them, for there were no hemorrhages, except a few and to a small amount, nor was there
delirium; all the other complaints were slight; in these the crises were regular, in most instances, with the
intermittents, in seventeen days; and I know no instance of a person dying of causus, nor becoming phrenitic. The
tertians were more numerous than the ardent fevers, and attended with more pain; but these all had four periods in
regular succession from the first attack, and they had a complete crisis in seven, without a relapse in any instance.
The quartans attacked many at first, in the form of regular quartans, but in no few cases a transition from other
fevers and diseases into quartans took place; they were protracted, as is wont with them, indeed, more so than usual.
Quotidian, nocturnal, and wandering fevers attacked many persons, some of whom continued to keep up, and others were
confined to bed. In most instances these fevers were prolonged under the Pleiades and till winter. Many persons, and
more especially children, had convulsions from the commencement; and they had fever, and the convulsions supervened
upon the fevers; in most cases they were protracted, but free from danger, unless in those who were in a deadly state
from other complaints. Those fevers which were continual in the main, and with no intermissions, but having
exacerbations in the tertian form, there being remissions the one day and exacerbations the next, were the most violent
of all those which occurred at that time, and the most protracted, and occurring with the greatest pains, beginning
mildly, always on the whole increasing, and being exacerbated, and always turning worse, having small remissions, and
after an abatement having more violent paroxysms, and growing worse, for the most part, on the critical days. Rigors,
in all cases, took place in an irregular and uncertain manner, very rare and weak in them, but greater in all other
fevers; frequent sweats, but most seldom in them, bringing no alleviation, but, on the contrary, doing mischief. Much
cold of the extremities in them, and these were warmed with difficulty. Insomnolency, for the most part, especially in
these fevers, and again a disposition to coma. The bowels, in all diseases, were disordered, and in a bad state, but
worst of all in these. The urine, in most of them, was either thin and crude, yellow, and after a time with slight
symptoms of concoction in a critical form, or having the proper thickness, but muddy, and neither settling nor
subsiding; or having small and bad, and crude sediments; these being the worst of all. Coughs attended these fevers,
but I cannot state that any harm or good ever resulted from the cough.

3. The most of these were protracted and troublesome, went on in a very disorderly and irregular form, and, for the
most part, did in a crisis, either in the fatal cases or in the others; for if it left some of them for a season it
soon returned again. In a few instances the lever terminated with a crisis; in the earliest of these about the
eightieth day, and some of these relapsed, so that most of them were not free from the fever during the winter; but the
fever left most of them without a crisis, and these things happened alike to those who recovered and to those who did
not. There being much want of crisis and much variety as to these diseases, the greatest and worst symptom attended the
most of them, namely, a loathing of all articles of food, more especially with those who had otherwise fatal symptoms;
but they were not unseasonably thirsty in such fevers. After a length of time, with much suffering and great wasting,
abscesses were formed in these cases, either unusually large, so that the patients could not support them, or unusually
small, so that they did no good, but soon relapsed and speedily got worse. The diseases which attacked them were in the
form of dysenteries, tenesmus, lientery, and fluxes; but, in some cases, there were dropsies, with or without these
complaints. Whatever attacked them violently speedily cut them off, or again, did them no good. Small rashes, and not
corresponding to the violence of the disease, and quickly disappearing, or swellings occurred about the ears, which
were not resolved, and brought on no crisis. In some they were determined to the joints, and especially to the
hip-joint, terminating critically with a few, and quickly again increasing to its original habit.

4. People died of all these diseases, but mostly of these fevers, and notably infants just weaned, and older
children, until eight or ten years of age, and those before puberty. These things occurred to those affected with the
complaints described above, and to many persons at first without them. The only favorable symptom, and the greatest of
those which occurred, and what saved most of those who were in the greatest dangers, was the conversion of it to a
strangury, and when, in addition to this, abscesses were formed. The strangury attacked, most especially, persons of
the ages I have mentioned, but it also occurred in many others, both of those who were not confined to bed and those
who were. There was a speedy and great change in all these cases. For the bowels, if they happened previously to have
watery discharges of a bad character, became regular, they got an appetite for food, and the fevers were mild
afterwards. But, with regard to the strangury itself, the symptoms were protracted and painful. Their urine was
copious, thick, of various characters, red, mixed with pus, and was passed with pain. These all recovered, and I did
not see a single instance of death among them.

5. With regard to the dangers of these cases, one must always attend to the seasonable concoction of all the
evacuations, and to the favorable and critical abscesses. The concoctions indicate a speedy crisis and recovery of
health; crude and undigested evacuations, and those which are converted into bad abscesses, indicate either want of
crisis, or pains, or prolongation of the disease, or death, or relapses; which of these it is to be must be determined
from other circumstances. The physician must be able to tell the antecedents, know the present, and foretell the future
— must mediate these things, and have two special objects in view with regard to disease, namely, to do good or to do
no harm. The art consists in three things — the disease, the patient, and the physician. The physician is the servant
of the art, and the patient must combat the disease along with the physician.

6. Pains about the head and neck, and heaviness of the same along with pain, occur either without fevers or in
fevers. Convulsions occurring in persons attacked with frenzy, and having vomitings of verdigris-green bile, in some
cases quickly prove fatal. In ardent fevers, and in those other fevers in which there is pain of the neck, heaviness of
the temples, mistiness about the eyes, and distention about the hypochondriac region, not unattended with pain,
hemorrhage from the nose takes place, but those who have heaviness of the whole head, cardialgia and nausea, vomit
bilious and pituitous matters; children, in such affections, are generally attacked with convulsions, and women have
these and also pains of the uterus; whereas, in elder persons, and those in whom the heat is already more subdued,
these cases end in paralysis, mania, and loss of sight.

Third Constitution

7. In Thasus, a little before and during the season of Arcturus, there were frequent and great rains, with northerly
winds. About the equinox, and till the setting of the Pleiades, there were a few southerly rains: the winter northerly
and parched, cold, with great winds and snow. Great storms about the equinox, the spring northerly, dryness, rains few
and cold. About the summer solstice, scanty rains, and great cold until near the season of the Dog-star. After the
Dog-days, until the season of Arcturus, the summer hot, great droughts, not in intervals, but continued and severe: no
rain; the Etesian winds blew; about the season of Arcturus southerly rains until the equinox.

8. In this state of things, during winter, paraplegia set in, and attacked many, and some died speedily; and
otherwise the disease prevailed much in an epidemical form, but persons remained free from all other diseases. Early in
the spring, ardent fevers commenced and continued through the summer until the equinox. Those then that were attacked
immediately after the commencement of the spring and summer, for the most part recovered, and but few of them died. But
when the autumn and the rains had set in, they were of a fatal character, and the greater part then died. When in these
attacks of ardent fevers there was a proper and copious hemorrhage from the nose, they were generally saved by it, and
I do not know a single person who had a proper hemorrhage who died in this constitution. Philiscus, Epaminon, and
Silenus, indeed, who had a trifling epistaxis on the fourth and fifth day, died. Most of those taken with had a rigor
about the time of the crisis, and notably those who had no hemorrhage; these had also rigor associated.

9. Some were attacked with jaundice on the sixth day, but these were benefited either by an urinary purgation, or a
disorder of the bowels, or a copious hemorrhage, as in the case of Heraclides, who was lodged with Aristocydes: this
person, though he had the hemorrhage from the nose, the purgation by the bladder, and disorder of the bowels,
experienced a favorable crisis on the twentieth day, not like the servant of Phanagoras, who had none of these
symptoms, and died. The hemorrhages attacked most persons, but especially young persons and those in the prime of life,
and the greater part of those who had not the hemorrhage died: elderly persons had jaundice or disorder of the bowels,
such as Bion, who was lodged with Silenus. Dysenteries were epidemical during the summer, and some of those cases in
which the hemorrhage occurred, terminated in dysentery, as happened to the slave of Eraton, and to Mullus, who had a
copious hemorrhage, which settled down into dysentery, and they recovered. This humor was redundant in many cases,
since in those who had not the hemorrhage about the crisis, but the risings about the ears disappeared, after their
disappearance there was a sense of weight in the left flank extending to the extremity of the hip, and pain setting in
after the crisis, with a discharge of thin urine; they began to have small hemorrhages about the twenty-fourth day, and
the swelling was converted into the hemorrhage. In the case of Antiphon, the son of Critobulus’ son, the fever ceased
and came to a crisis about the fortieth day.

10. Many women were seized, but fewer than of the men, and there were fewer deaths among them. But most of them had
difficult parturition, and after labor they were taken ill, and these most especially died, as, for example, the
daughter of Telebolus died on the sixth day after delivery. Most females had the menstrual discharge during the fever,
and many girls had it then for the first time: in certain individuals both the hemorrhage from the nose and the menses
appeared; thus, in the case of the virgin daughter of Daetharses, the menses then took place for the first time, and
she had also a copinous hemorrhage from the nose, and I knew no instance of any one dying when one or other of these
took place properly. But all those in the pregnant state that were attacked had abortions, as far as I observed. The
urine in most cases was of the proper color, but thin, and having scanty sediments: in most the bowels were disordered
with thin and bilious dejections; and many, after passing through the other crises, terminated in dysenteries, as
happened to Xenophanes and Critias. The urine was watery, copious, clear, and thin; and even after the crises, when the
sediment was natural, and all the other critical symptoms were favorable, as I recollect having happened to Bion, who
was lodged in the house of Silenus, and Critias, who lived with Xenophanes, the slave of Areton, and the wife of
Mnesistratus. But afterwards all these were attacked with dysentery. It would be worth while to inquire whether the
watery urine was the cause of this. About the season of Arcturus many had the crisis on the eleventh day, and in them
the regular relapses did not take place, but they became comatose about this time, especially children; but there were
fewest deaths of all among them.

11. About the equinox, and until the season of the Pleiades, and at the approach of winter, many ardent fevers set
in; but great numbers at that season were seized with phrenitis, and many died; a few cases also occurred during the
summer. These then made their attack at the commencement of ardent fevers, which were attended with fatal symptoms; for
immediately upon their setting in, there were acute fever and small rigors, insomnolency, aberration, thirst, nausea,
insignificant sweats about the forehead and clavicles, but no general perspiration; they had much delirious talking,
fears, despondency, great coldness of the extremities, in the feet, but more especially in their hands: the paroxysms
were on the even days; and in most cases, on the fourth day, the most violent pains set in, with sweats, generally
coldish, and the extremities could not be warmed, but were livid and rather cold, and they had then no thirst; in them
the urine was black, scanty, thin, and the bowels were constipated; there was an hemorrhage from the nose in no case in
which these symptoms occurred, but merely a trifling epistaxis; and none of them had a relapse, but they died on the
sixth day with sweats. In the phrenitic cases, all the symptoms which have been described did not occur, but in them
the disease mostly came to a crisis on the eleventh day, and in some on the twentieth. In those cases in which the
phrenitis did not begin immediately, but about the third or fourth day, the disease was moderate at the commencement,
but assumed a violent character about the seventh day. There was a great number of diseases, and of those affected,
they who died were principally infants, young persons, adults having smooth bodies, white skins, straight and black
hair, dark eyes, those living recklessly and luxuriously; persons with shrill, or rough voices, who stammered and were
passionate, and women more especially died from this form. In this constitution, four symptoms in particular proved
salutary; either a hemorrhage from the nose, or a copious discharge by the bladder of urine, having an abundant and
proper sediment, or a bilious disorder of the bowels at the proper time, or an attack of dysentery. And in many cases
it happened, that the crisis did not take place by any one of the symptoms which have been mentioned, but the patient
passed through most of them, and appeared to be in an uncomfortable way, and yet all who were attacked with these
symptoms recovered. All the symptoms which I have described occurred also to women and girls; and whoever of them had
any of these symptoms in a favorable manner, or the menses appeared abundantly, were saved thereby, and had a crisis,
so that I do not know a single female who had any of these favorably that died. But the daughter of Philo, who had a
copious hemorrhage from the nose, and took supper unseasonably on the seventh day, died. In those cases of acute, and
more especially of ardent fevers, in which there is an involuntary discharge of tears, you may expect a nasal
hemorrhage unless the other symptoms be of a fatal type, for in those of a bad description, they do not indicate a
hemorrhage, but death.

12. Swellings about the ears, with pain in fevers, sometimes when the fever went off critically, neither subsided
nor were converted into pus; in these cases a bilious diarrhoea, or dysentery, or thick urine having a sediment,
carried off the disease, as happened to Hermippus of Clazomenae. The circumstances relating to crises, as far as we can
recognize them, were so far similar and so far dissimilar. Thus two brothers became ill at the same hour (they were
brothers of Epigenes, and lodged near the theatre), of these the elder had a crisis on the sixth day, and the younger
on the seventh, and both had a relapse at the same hour; it then left them for five days, and from the return of the
fever both had a crisis together on the seventeenth day. Most had a crisis on the sixth day; it then left them for six
days, and from the relapse there was a crisis on the fifth day. But those who had a crisis on the seventh day, had an
intermission for seven days; and the crisis took place on the third day after the relapse. Those who had a crisis on
the sixth day, after an interval of six days were seized again on the third, and having left them for one day, the
fever attacked them again on the next and came to a crisis, as happened to Evagon the son of Daetharses. Those in whom
the crisis happened on the sixth day, had an intermission of seven days, and from the relapse there was a crisis on the
fourth, as happened to the daughter of Aglaidas. The greater part of those who were taken ill under this constitution
of things, were affected in this manner, and I did not know a single case of recovery, in which there was not a relapse
agreeably to the stated order of relapses; and all those recovered in which the relapses took place according to this
form: nor did I know a single instance of those who then passed through the disease in this manner who had another
relapse.

13. In these diseases death generally happened on the sixth day, as with Epaminondas, Silenus, and Philiscus the son
of Antagoras. Those who had parotid swellings experienced a crisis on the twentieth day, but in all these cases the
disease went off without coming to a suppuration, and was turned upon the bladder. But in Cratistonax, who lived by the
temple of Hercules, and in the maid servant of Scymnus the fuller, it turned to a suppuration, and they died. Those who
had a crisis on the seventh day, had an intermission of nine days, and a relapse which came to a crisis on the fourth
day from the return of the fever, as was the case with Pantacles, who resided close by the temple of Bacchus. Those who
had a crisis on the seventh day, after an interval of six days had a relapse, from which they had a crisis on the
seventh day, as happened to Phanocritus, who was lodged with Gnathon the fuller. During the winter, about the winter
solstices, and until the equinox, the ardent fevers and frenzies prevailed, and many died. The crisis, however,
changed, and happened to the greater number on the fifth day from the commencement, left them for four days and
relapsed; and after the return, there was a crisis on the fifth day, making in all fourteen days. The crisis took place
thus in the case of most children, also in elder persons. Some had a crisis on the eleventh day, a relapse on the
fourteenth, a complete crisis on the twentieth; but certain persons, who had a rigor about the twentieth, had a crisis
on the fortieth. The greater part had a rigor along with the original crisis, and these had also a rigor about the
crisis in the relapse. There were fewest cases of rigor in the spring, more in summer, still more in autumn, but by far
the most in winter; then hemorrhages ceased.

Sect. III

1. With regard to diseases, the circumstances from which we form a judgment of them are — by attending to the
general nature of all, and the peculiar nature of each individual — to the disease, the patient, and the applications —
to the person who applies them, as that makes a difference for better or for worse — to the whole constitution of the
season, and particularly to the state of the heavens, and the nature of each country; — to the patient’s habits,
regimen, and pursuits; — to his conversation, manners, taciturnity, thoughts, sleep, or absence of sleep, and sometimes
his dreams, what and when they occur; — to his picking and scratching; — to his tears; — to the alvine discharges,
urine, sputa, and vomitings; and to the changes of diseases from the one into the other; — to the deposits, whether of
a deadly or critical character; — to the sweat, coldness, rigor, cough, sneezing, hiccup, respiration, eructation,
flatulence, whether passed silently or with a noise; — to hemorrhages and hemorrhoids; — from these, and their
consequences, we must form our judgment.

2. Fevers are — the continual, some of which hold during the day and have a remission at night, and others hold a
remission during the day; semi-tertians, tertians, quartans, quintans, septans, nonans. The most acute, strongest, most
dangerous, and fatal diseases, occur in the continual fever. The least dangerous of all, and the mildest and most
protracted, is the quartan, for it is not only such from itself, but it also carries off other great diseases. In what
is called the semi-tertian, other acute diseases are apt to occur, and it is the most fatal of all others, and moreover
phthisical persons, and those laboring under other protracted diseases, are apt to be attacked by it. The nocturnal
fever is not very fatal, but protracted; the diurnal is still more protracted, and in some cases passes into phthisis.
The septan is protracted, but not fatal; the nonan more protracted, and not fatal. The true tertian comes quickly to a
crisis, and is not fatal; but the quintan is the worst of all, for it proves fatal when it precedes an attack of
phthisis, and when it supervenes on persons who are already consumptive. There are peculiar modes, and constitutions,
and paroxysms, in every one of these fevers; for example — the continual, in some cases at the very commencement,
grows, as it were, and attains its full strength, and rises to its most dangerous pitch, but is diminished about and at
the crisis; in others it begins gentle and suppressed, but gains ground and is exacerbated every day, and bursts forth
with all its heat about and at the crisis; while in others, again, it commences mildly, increases, and is exacerbated
until it reaches its acme, and then remits until at and about the crisis. These varieties occur in every fever, and in
every disease. From these observations one must regulate the regimen accordingly. There are many other important
symptoms allied to these, part of which have been already noticed, and part will be described afterwards, from a
consideration of which one may judge, and decided in each case, whether the disease be acute, acute, and whether it
will end in death or recovery; or whether it will be protracted, and will end in death or recovery; and in what cases
food is to be given, and in what not; and when and to what amount, and what particular kind of food is to be
administered.

3. Those diseases which have their paroxysms on even days have their crises on even days; and those which have their
paroxysms on uneven days have their crises on uneven days. The first period of those which have the crisis on even
days, is the 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 14th, 20th, 30th, 40th, 60th, 80th, 100th; and the first period of those which have
their crises on uneven days, is the 1st, 3d, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 17th, 21th, 27th, 31st. It should be known, that if
the crisis take place on any other day than on those described, it indicates that there will be a relapse, which may
prove fatal. But one ought to pay attention, and know in these seasons what crises will lead to recovery and what to
death, or to changes for the better or the worse. Irregular fevers, quartans, quintans, septans, and nonans should be
studied, in order to find out in what periods their crises take place.

Fourteen Cases of Disease

CASE I. Philiscus, who lived by the Wall, took to bed on the first day of acute fever; he sweated; towards night was
uneasy. On the second day all the symptoms were exacerbated; late in the evening had a proper stool from a small
clyster; the night quiet. On the third day, early in the morning and until noon, he appeared to be free from fever;
towards evening, acute fever, with sweating, thirst, tongue parched; passed black urine; night uncomfortable, no sleep;
he was delirious on all subjects. On the fourth, all the symptoms exacerbated, urine black; night more comfortable,
urine of a better color. On the fifth, about mid-day, had a slight trickling of pure blood from the nose; urine varied
in character, having floating in it round bodies, resembling semen, and scattered, but which did not fall to the
bottom; a suppository having been applied, some scanty flatulent matters were passed; night uncomfortable, little
sleep, talking incoherently; extremities altogether cold, and could not be warmed; urine, black; slept a little towards
day; loss of speech, cold sweats; extremities livid; about the middle of the sixth day he died. The respiration
throughout, like that of a person recollecting himself, was rare, and large, and spleen was swelled upon in a round
tumor, the sweats cold throughout, the paroxysms on the even days.

CASE II. Silenus lived on the Broad-way, near the house of Evalcidas. From fatigue, drinking, and unseasonable
exercises, he was seized with fever. He began with having pain in the loins; he had heaviness of the head, and there
was stiffness of the neck. On the first day the alvine discharges were bilious, unmixed, frothy, high colored, and
copious; urine black, having a black sediment; he was thirsty, tongue dry; no sleep at night. On the second, acute
fever, stools more copious, thinner, frothy; urine black, an uncomfortable night, slight delirium. On the third, all
the symptoms exacerbated; an oblong distention, of a softish nature, from both sides of the hypochondrium to the navel;
stools thin, and darkish; urine muddy, and darkish; no sleep at night; much talking, laughter, singing, he could not
restrain himself. On the fourth, in the same state. On the fifth, stools bilious, unmixed, smooth, greasy; urine thin,
and transparent; slight absence of delirium. On the sixth, slight perspiration about the head; extremities cold and
livid; much tossing about; no passage from the bowels, urine suppressed, acute fever. On the seventh, loss of speech;
extremities could no longer be kept warm; no discharge of urine. On the eighth, a cold sweat all over; red rashes with
sweat, of a round figure, small, like vari, persistent, not subsiding; by means of a slight stimulus, a copious
discharge from the bowels, of a thin and undigested character, with pain; urine acrid, and passed with pain;
extremities slightly heated; sleep slight, and comatose; speechless; urine thin, and transparent. On the ninth, in the
same state. On the tenth, no drink taken; comatose, sleep slight; alvine discharges the same; urine abundant, and
thickish; when allowed to stand, the sediment farinaceous and white; extremities again cold. On the eleventh, he died.
At the commencement, and throughout, the respiration was slow and large; there was a constant throbbing in the
hypochondrium; his age was about twenty.

CASE III. Herophon was seized with an acute fever; alvine discharges at first were scanty, and attended with
tenesmus; but afterwards they were passed of a thin, bilious character, and frequent; there was no sleep; urine black,
and thin. On the fifth, in the morning, deafness; all the symptoms exacerbated; spleen swollen; distention of the
hypochondrium; alvine discharges scanty, and black; he became delirious. On the sixth, delirious; at night, sweating,
coldness; the delirium continued. On the seventh, he became cold, thirsty, was disordered in mind; at night recovered
his senses; slept. On the eighth, was feverish; the spleen diminished in size; quite collected; had pain at first about
the groin, on the same side as the spleen; had pains in both legs; night comfortable; urine better colored, had a
scanty sediment. On the ninth, sweated; the crisis took place; fever remitted. On the fifth day afterwards, fever
relapsed, spleen immediately became swollen; acute fever; deafness again. On the third day after the relapse, the
spleen diminished; deafness less; legs painful; sweated during the night; crisis took place on the seventeenth day; had
no disorder of the senses during the relapse.

CASE IV. In Thasus, the wife of Philinus, having been delivered of a daughter, the discharge being natural, and
other matters going on mildly, on the fourteenth day after delivery was seized with fever, attended with rigor; was
pained at first in the cardiac region of the stomach and right hypochondrium; pain in the genital organs; lochial
discharge ceased. Upon the application of a pessary all these symptoms were alleviated; pains of the head, neck, and
loins remained; no sleep; extremities cold; thirst; bowels in a hot state; stools scanty; urine thin, and colorless at
first. On the sixth, towards night, senses much disordered, but again were restored. On the seventh, thirsty; the
evacuations bilious, and high colored. On the eighth, had a rigor; acute fever; much spasm, with pain; talked much,
incoherently; upon the application of a suppository, rose to stool, and passed copious dejections, with a bilious flux;
no sleep. On the ninth, spasms. On the tenth, slightly recollected. On the eleventh, slept; had perfect recollection,
but again immediately wandered; passed a large quantity of urine with spasms, (the attendants seldom putting her in
mind), it was thick, white, like urine which has been shaken after it has stood for a considerable time until it has
subsided, but it had no sediment; in color and consistence, the urine resembled that of cattle, as far as I observed.
About the fourteenth day, startings over the whole body; talked much; slightly collected, but presently became again
delirious. About the seventeenth day became speechless, on the twentieth died.

CASE V. The wife of Epicrates, who was lodged at the house of Archigetes, being near the term of delivery, was
seized with a violent rigor, and, as was said, she did not become heated; next day the same. On the third, she was
delivered of a daughter, and everything went on properly. On the day following her delivery, she was seized with acute
fever, pain in the cardiac region of the stomach, and in the genital parts. Having had a suppository, was in so far
relieved; pain in the head, neck, and loins; no sleep; alvine discharges scanty, bilious, thin, and unmixed; urine
thin, and blackish. Towards the night of the sixth day from the time she was seized with the fever, became delirious.
On the seventh, all the symptoms exacerbated; insomnolency, delirium, thirst; stools bilious, and high colored. On the
eighth, had a rigor; slept more. On the ninth, the same. On the tenth, her limbs painfully affected; pain again of the
cardiac region of the stomach; heaviness of the head; no delirium; slept more; bowels constipated. On the eleventh,
passed urine of a better color, and having an abundant sediment; felt lighter. On the fourteenth had a rigor; acute
fever. On the fifteenth, had a copious vomiting of bilious and yellow matters; sweated; fever gone; at night acute
fever; urine thick, sediment white. On the seventeenth, an exacerbation; night uncomfortable; no sleep; delirium. On
the eighteenth, thirsty; tongue parched; no sleep; much delirium; legs painfully affected. About the twentieth, in the
morning, had as light rigor; was comatose; slept tranquilly; had slight vomiting of bilious and black matters; towards
night deafness. About the twenty-first, weight generally in the left side, with pain; slight urine thick, muddy, and
reddish; when allowed to stand, had no sediment; in other respects felt lighter; fever not gone; fauces painful from
the commencement, and red; uvula retracted; defluxion remained acrid, pungent, and saltish throughout. About the
twenty-seventh, free of fever; sediment in the urine; pain in the side. About the thirty-first, was attacked with
fever, bilious diarrhea; slight bilious vomiting on the fortieth. Had a complete crisis, and was freed from the fever
on the eightieth day.

CASE VI. Cleonactides, who was lodged above the Temple of Hercules, was seized with a fever in an irregular form;
was pained in the head and left side from the commencement, and had other pains resembling those produced by fatigue;
paroxysms of the fevers inconstant and irregular; occasional sweats; the paroxysms generally attacked on the critical
days. About the twenty-fourth was cold in the extremities of the hands, vomitings bilious, yellow, and frequent, soon
turning to a verdigris-green color; general relief. About the thirtieth, began to have hemorrhage from both nostrils,
and this continued in an irregular manner until near the crisis; did not loathe food, and had no thirst throughout, nor
was troubled with insomnolency; urine thin, and not devoid of color. When about the thirtieth day, passed reddish
urine, having a copious red sediment; was relieved, but afterwards the characters of the urine varied, sometimes having
sediment, and sometimes not. On the sixtieth, the sediment in the urine copious, white, and smooth; all the symptoms
ameliorated; intermission of the fever; urine thin, and well colored. On the seventieth, fever gone for ten days. On
the eightieth had a rigor, was seized with acute fever, sweated much; a red, smooth sediment in the urine; and a
perfect crisis.

CASE VII. Meton was seized with fever; there was a painful weight in the loins. Next day, after drinking water
pretty copiously, had proper evacuations from the bowels. On the third, heaviness of the head, stools thin, bilious,
and reddish. On the fourth, all the symptoms exacerbated; had twice a scanty trickling of blood from the right nostril;
passed an uncomfortable night; alvine discharges like those on the third day; urine darkish, had a darkish cloud
floating in it, of a scattered form, which did not subside. On the fifth, a copious hemorrhage of pure blood from the
left he sweated, and had a crisis. After the fever restless, and had some delirium; urine thin, and darkish; had an
affusion of warm water on the head; slept and recovered his senses. In this case there was no relapse, but there were
frequent hemorrhages after the crisis.

CASE VIII. Erasinus, who lived near the Canal of Bootes, was seized with fever after supper; passed the night in an
agitated state. During the first day quiet, but in pain at night. On the second, symptoms all exacerbated; at night
delirious. On the third, was in a painful condition; great incoherence. On the fourth, in a most uncomfortable state;
had no sound sleep at night, but dreaming and talking; then all the appearances worse, of a formidable and alarming
character; fear, impatience. On the morning of the fifth, was composed, and quite coherent, but long before noon was
furiously mad, so that he could not constrain himself; extremities cold, and somewhat livid; urine without sediment;
died about sunset. The fever in this case was accompanied by sweats throughout; the sweats throughout; the hypochondria
were in a state of meteorism, with distention and pain; the urine was black, has round substances floating in it, which
did not subside; the alvine evacuations were not stopped; thirst throughout not great; much spasms with sweats about
the time of death.

CASE IX. Criton, in Thasus, while still on foot, and going about, was seized with a violent pain in the great toe;
he took to bed the same day, had rigors and nausea, recovered his heat slightly, at night was delirious. On the second,
swelling of the whole foot, and about the ankle erythema, with distention, and small bullae (phlyctaenae); acute fever;
he became furiously deranged; alvine discharges bilious, unmixed, and rather frequent. He died on the second day from
the commencement.

CASE X. The Clazomenian who was lodged by the Well of Phrynichides was seized with fever. He had pain in the head,
neck, and loins from the beginning, and immediately afterwards deafness; no sleep, acute fever, hypochondria elevated
with a swelling, but not much distention; tongue dry. On the fourth, towards night, he became delirious. On the fifth,
in an uneasy state. On the sixth, all the symptoms exacerbated. About the eleventh a slight remission; from the
commencement to the fourteenth day the alvine discharges thin, copious, and of the color of water, but were well
supported; the bowels then became constipated. Urine throughout thin, and well colored, and had many substances
scattered through it, but no sediment. About the sixteenth, urine somewhat thicker, which had a slight sediment;
somewhat better, and more collected. On the seventeenth, urine again thin; swellings about both his ears, with pain; no
sleep, some incoherence; legs painfully affected. On the twentieth, free of fever, had a crisis, no sweat, perfectly
collected. About the twenty-seventh, violent pain of the right hip; it speedily went off. The swellings about the ears
subsided, and did not suppurate, but were painful. About the thirty-first, a diarrhea attended with a copious discharge
of watery matter, and symptoms of dysentery; passed thick urine; swellings about the ears gone. About the fortieth day,
had pain in the right eye, sight dull. It went away.

CASE XI. The wife of Dromeades having been delivered of a female child, and all other matters going on properly, on
the second day after was seized with rigor and acute fever. Began to have pain about the hypochondrium on the first
day; had nausea and incoherence, and for some hours afterwards had no sleep; respiration rare, large, and suddenly
interrupted. On the day following that on which she had the rigor, alvine discharges proper; urine thick, white, muddy,
like urine which has been shaken after standing for some time, until the sediment had fallen to the bottom; it had no
sediment; she did not sleep during the night. On the third day, about noon, had a rigor, acute fever; urine the same;
pain of the hypochondria, nausea, an uncomfortable night, no sleep; a coldish sweat all over, but heat quickly
restored. On the fourth, slight alleviation of the symptoms about the hypochondria; heaviness of the head, with pain;
somewhat comatose; slight epistaxis, tongue dry, thirst, urine thin and oily; slept a little, upon awaking was somewhat
comatose; slight coldness, slept during the night, was delirious. On the morning of the sixth had a rigor, but soon
recovered her heat, sweated all over; extremities cold, was delirious, respiration rare and large. Shortly afterwards
spasms from the head began, and she immediately expired.

CASE XII. A man, in a heated state, took supper, and drank more than enough; he vomited the whole during the night;
acute fever, pain of the right hypochondrium, a softish inflammation from the inner part; passed an uncomfortable
night; urine at the commencement thick, red, but when allowed to stand, had no sediment, tongue dry, and not very
thirsty. On the fourth, acute fever, pains all over. On the fifth, urine smooth, oily, and copious; acute fever. On the
sixth, in the evening, very incoherent, no sleep during the night. On the seventh, all the symptoms exacerbated; urine
of the same characters; much talking, and he could not contain himself; the bowels being stimulated, passed a watery
discharge with lumbrici: night equally painful. In the morning had a rigor; acute fever, hot sweat, appeared to be free
of fever; did not sleep long; after the sleep a chill, ptyalism; in the evening, great incoherence; after a little,
vomited a small quantity of dark bilious matters. On the ninth, coldness, much delirium, did not sleep. On the tenth,
pains in the limbs, all the symptoms exacerbated; he was delirious. On the eleventh, he died.

CASE XIII. A woman, who lodged on the Quay, being three months gone with child, was seized with fever, and
immediately began to have pains in the loins. On the third day, pain of the head and neck, extending to the clavicle,
and right hand; she immediately lost the power of speech; was paralyzed in the right hand, with spasms, after the
manner of paraplegia; was quite incoherent; passed an uncomfortable night; did not sleep; disorder of the bowels,
attended with bilious, On the fourth, recovered the use of her tongue; spasms of the same parts, and general pains
remained; swelling in the hypochondrium, accompanied with pain; did not sleep, was quite incoherent; bowels disordered,
urine thin, and not of a good color. On the fifth, acute fever; pain of the hypochondrium, quite incoherent; alvine
evacuations bilious; towards night had a sweat, and was freed from the fever. On the sixth, recovered her reason; was
every way relieved; the pain remained about the left clavicle; was thirsty, urine thin, had no sleep. On the seventh
trembling, slight coma, some incoherence, pains about the clavicle and left arm remained; in all other respects was
alleviated; quite coherent. For three days remained free from fever. On the eleventh, had a relapse, with rigor and
fever. About the fourteenth day, vomited pretty abundantly bilious and yellow matters, had a sweat, the fever went off,
by coming to a crisis.

CASE XIV. Melidia, who lodged near the Temple of Juno, began to feel a violent pain of the head, neck, and chest.
She was straightway seized with acute fever; a slight appearance of the menses; continued pains of all these parts. On
the sixth, was affected with coma, nausea, and rigor; redness about the cheeks; slight delirium. On the seventh, had a
sweat; the fever intermitted, the pains remained. A relapse; little sleep; urine throughout of a good color, but thin;
the alvine evacuations were thin, bilious, acrid, very scanty, black, and fetid; a white, smooth sediment in the urine;
had a sweat, and experienced a perfect crisis on the eleventh day.

BOOK II.

Sect. I

CASE I. Pythion, who lived by the Temple of the Earth, on the first day, trembling commencing from his hands; acute
fever, delirium. On the second, all the symptoms were exacerbated. On the third, the same. On the fourth alvine
discharges scanty, unmixed, and bilious. On the fifth, all the symptoms were exacerbated, the tremors remained; little
sleep, the bowels constipated. On the sixth sputa mixed, reddish. On the seventh, mouth drawn aside. On the eighth, all
the symptoms were exacerbated; the tremblings were again constant; urine, from the beginning to the eighth day, thin,
and devoid of color; substances floating in it, cloudy. On the tenth he sweated; sputa somewhat digested, had a crisis;
urine thinnish about the crisis; but after the crisis, on the fortieth day, an abscess about the anus, which passed off
by a strangury.

Explanation of the characters. It is probably that the great discharge of urine brought about the resolution of the
disease, and the cure of the patient on the fortieth day.

CASE II. Hermocrates, who lived by the New Wall, was seized with fever. He began to have pain in the head and loins;
an empty distention of the hypochondrium; the tongue at first was parched; deafness at the commencement; there was no
sleep; not very thirsty; urine thick and red, when allowed to stand it did not subside; alvine discharge very dry, and
not scanty. On the fifth, urine thin, had substances floating in it which did not fall to the bottom; at night he was
delirious. On the sixth, had jaundice; all the symptoms were exacerbated; had no recollection. On the seventh, in an
uncomfortable state; urine thin, as formerly; on the following days the same. About the eleventh day, all the symptoms
appeared to be lightened. Coma set in; urine thicker, reddish, thin substances below, had no sediment; by degrees he
became collected. On the fourteenth, fever gone; had no sweat; slept, quite collected; urine of the same characters.
About the seventeenth, had a relapse, became hot. On the following days, acute fever, urine thin, was delirious. Again,
on the twentieth, had a crisis; free of fever; had no sweat; no appetite through the whole time; was perfectly
collected; could not speak, tongue dry, without thirst; deep sleep. About the twenty-fourth day he became heated;
bowels loose, with a thin, watery discharge; on the following days acute fever, tongue parched. On the twenty-seventh
he died. In this patient deafness continued throughout; the urine either thick and red, without sediment, or thin,
devoid of color, and, having substances floating in it: he could taste nothing.

Explanation of the characters. It is probably that it was the suppression of the discharges from the bowels which
occasioned death on the twenty-seventh day.

CASE III. The man who was lodged in the Garden of Dealces: had heaviness of the head and pain in the right temple
for a considerable time, from some accidental cause, was seized with fever, and took to bed. On the second, there was a
trickling of pure blood from the left nostril, but the alvine discharges were proper, urine thin, mixed, having small
substances floating in it, like coarse barley meal, or semen. On the third, acute fever; stools black, thin, frothy, a
livid sediment in the dejections; slight coma; uneasiness at the times he had to get up; sediment in the urine livid,
and somewhat viscid. On the fourth, slight vomiting of bilious, yellow matters, and, after a short interval, of the
color of verdigris; a few drops of pure blood ran from the left nostril; stools the same; urine the same; sweated about
the head and clavicles; spleen enlarged, pain of the thigh on the same side; loose swelling of the right hypochondrium;
at night had no sleep, slight delirium. On the sixth, stools black, fatty, viscid, fetid; slept, more collected. On the
seventh, tongue dry, thirsty, did not sleep; was somewhat delirious; urine thin, not of a good color. On the eighth,
stools black, scanty, and compact; slept, became collected; not very thirsty. On the ninth had a rigor, acute fever,
sweated, a chill, was delirious, strabismus of the right eye, tongue dry, thirsty, without sleep. On the tenth, much
the same. On the eleventh, became quite collected; free from fever, slept, urine thin about the crisis. The two
following days without fever; it returned on the fourteenth, then immediately insomnolency and complete delirium. On
the fifteenth, urine muddy, like that which has been shaken after the sediment has fallen to the bottom; acute fever,
quite delirious, did not sleep; knees and legs painful; after a suppository, had alvine dejections of a black color. On
the sixteenth, urine thin, had a cloudy eneorema, was delirious. On the seventeenth, in the morning, extremities cold,
was covered up with the bedclothes, acute fever, general sweat, felt relieved, more collected; not free of fever,
thirsty, vomited yellow bile, in small quantities; formed faeces passed from the bowels, but soon afterwards black,
scanty, and thin; urine thin, not well colored. On the eighteenth, not collected, comatose. On the nineteenth, in the
same state. On the twentieth, slept; quite collected, sweated, free from fever, not thirsty, but the urine thin. On the
twenty-first, slight delirium; somewhat thirsty, pain of the hypochondrium, and throbbing about the navel throughout.
On sediment in the urine, quite collected. Twenty-seventh, pain of the right hip joint; urine thin and bad, a sediment;
all the other symptoms milder. About the twenty-ninth, pain of the right eye; urine thin. Fortieth, dejections
pituitous, white, rather frequent; sweated abundantly all over; had a complete crisis.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that, by means of the stools, the urine, and the sweat, this patient
was cured in forty days.

Sect. II

CASE I. In Thasus, Philistes had headache of long continuance, and sometimes was confined to bed, with a tendency to
deep sleep; having been seized with continual fevers from drinking, the pain was exacerbated; during the night he, at
first, became hot. On the first day, he vomited some bilious matters, at first yellow, but afterwards of a
verdigris-green color, and in greater quantity; formed faeces passed from the bowels; passed the night uncomfortably.
On the second, deafness, acute fever; retraction of the right hypochondrium; urine thin, transparent, had some small
substances like semen floating in it; delirium ferox about mid-day. On the third, in an uncomfortable state. On the
fourth, convulsions; all the symptoms exacerbated. On the fifth, early in the morning, died.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the death of the patient on the fifth day is to be attributed to
a phrenitis, with unfavorable evacuations.

CASE II. Charion, who was lodged at the house of Demaenetus, contracted a fever from drinking. Immediately he had a
painful heaviness of the head; did not sleep; bowels disordered, with thin and somewhat bilious discharges. On the
third day, acute fever; trembling of the head, but especially of the lower lip; after a little time a rigor,
convulsions; he was quite delirious; passed the night uncomfortably. On the fourth, quiet, slept little, talked
incoherently. On the fifth, in pain; all the symptoms exacerbated; delirium; passed the night uncomfortably; did not
sleep. On the sixth, in the same state. On the seventh had a rigor, acute fever, sweated all over his body; had a
crisis. Throughout the alvine discharges were bilious, scanty, and unmixed; urine thin, well colored, having cloudy
substances floating in it. About the eighth day, passed urine of a better color, having a white scanty sediment; was
collected, free from fever for a season. On the ninth it relapsed. About the fourteenth, acute fever. On the sixteenth,
vomited pretty frequently yellow, bilious matters. On the seventeenth had a rigor, acute fever, sweated, free of fever;
had a crisis; urine, after the relapse and the crisis, well colored, having a sediment; neither was he delirious in the
relapse. On the eighteenth, became a little heated; some thirst, urine thin, with cloudy substances floating in it;
slight wandering in his mind. About the nineteenth, free of fever, had a pain in his neck; a sediment in the urine. Had
a complete crisis on the twentieth.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the patient was cured in twenty days, by the abundance of bilious
stools and urine.

CASE III. The daughter of Euryanax, a maid, was taken ill of fever. She was free of thirst throughout, but had no
relish for food. Alvine discharges small, urine thin, scanty, not well colored. In the beginning of the fever, had a
pain about the nates. On the sixth day, was free of fever, did not sweat, had a crisis; the complaint about the nates
came to a small suppuration, and burst at the crisis. After the crisis, on the seventh day, had a rigor, became
slightly heated, sweated. On the eighth day after the rigor, had an inconsiderable rigor; the extremities cold ever
after. About the tenth day, after a sweat which came on, she became delirious, and again immediately afterwards was
collected; these symptoms were said to have been brought on by eating grapes. After an intermission of the twelfth day,
she again talked much incoherently; her bowels disordered with bilious, scanty, unmixed, thin, acrid discharges; she
required to get frequently up. She died on the seventh day after the return of the delirium. At the commencement of the
disease she had pain in the throat, and it red throughout, uvula retracted, defluxions abundant, thin, acrid; coughed,
but had no concocted sputa; during the whole time loathed all kinds of food, nor had the least desire of anything; had
no thirst, nor drank anything worth mentioning; was silent, and never spoke a word; despondency; had no hopes of
herself. She had a congenital tendency to phthisis.

CASE IV. The woman affected with quinsy, who lodged in the house of Aristion: her complaint began in the tongue;
speech inarticulate; tongue red and parched. On the first day, felt chilly, and afterwards became heated. On the third
day, a rigor, acute fever; a reddish and hard swelling on both sides of the neck and chest, extremities cold and livid;
and livid; respiration elevated; the drink returned by the nose; she could not swallow; alvine and urinary discharges
suppressed. On the fourth, all of the symptoms were exacerbated. On the fifth she died of the quinsy.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the cause of death on the sixth day was the suppression of the
discharges.

CASE V. The young man who was lodged by the Liars’ Market was seized with fever from fatigue, labor, and running out
of season. On the first day, the bowels disordered, with bilious, thin, and copious dejections; urine thin and
blackish; had no sleep; was thirsty. On the second all the symptoms were exacerbated; dejections more copious and
unseasonable; he had no sleep; disorder of the intellect; slight sweat. On the third day, restless, thirst, nausea,
much tossing about, bewilderment, delirium; extremities livid and cold; softish distention of the hypochondrium on both
sides. On the fourth, did not sleep; still worse. On the seventh he died. He was about twenty years of age.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the cause of his death on the seventh day was the unseasonable
practices mentioned above. An acute affection.

CASE VI. The woman who lodged at the house of Tisamenas had a troublesome attack of iliac passion, much vomiting;
could not keep her drink; pains about the hypochondria, and pains also in the lower part of the belly; constant
tormina; not thirsty; became hot; extremities cold throughout, with nausea and insomnolency; urine scanty and thin;
dejections undigested, thin, scanty. Nothing could do her any good. She died.

CASE VII. A woman of Pantimides, from a miscarriage, was taken ill of fever. On the first day, tongue dry, thirst,
nausea, insomnolency, belly disordered, with thin, copious, undigested dejections. On the second day, had a rigor,
acute fever; alvine discharges copious; had no sleep. On the third, pains greater. On the fourth, delirious. On the
seventh she died. Belly throughout loose, with copious, thin, undigested evacuations; urine scanty, thin. An ardent
fever.

CASE VIII. Another woman, after a miscarriage about the fifth month, the wife of Ocetes, was seized with fever. At
first had sometimes coma and sometimes insomnolency; pain of the loins; heaviness of the head. On the second, the
bowels were disordered, with scanty, thin, and at first unmixed dejections. On the third, more copious, and worse; at
night did not sleep. On the fourth was delirious; frights, despondency; strabismus of the right eye; a faint cold sweat
about the head; extremities cold. On the fifth day, all the symptoms were exacerbated; talked much incoherently, and
again immediately became collected; had no thirst; labored under insomnolency; alvine dejections copious, and
unseasonable throughout; urine scanty, thin, darkish; extremities cold, somewhat livid. On the sixth day, in the same
state. On the seventh she died. Phrenitis.

CASE IX. A woman who lodged near the Liars’ Market, having then brought forth a son in a first and difficult labor,
was seized with fever. Immediately on the commencement had thirst, nausea, and cardialgia; tongue dry; bowels
disordered, with thin and scanty dejections; had no sleep. On the second, had slight rigor, acute fever; a faint cold
sweat about the head. On the third, painfully affected; evacuations from the bowels undigested, thin, and copious. On
the fourth, had a rigor; all the symptoms exacerbated; insomnolency. On the fifth, in a painful state. On the sixth, in
the same state; discharges from the bowels liquid and copious. On the seventh, had a rigor, fever acute; much thirst;
much tossing about; towards evening a cold sweat over all; extremities cold, could no longer be kept warm; and again at
night had a rigor; extremities could not be warmed; she did not sleep; was slightly delirious, and again speedily
collected. On the eighth, about mid-day, she became warm, was thirsty, comatose, had nausea; vomited small quantities
of yellowish bile; restless at night, did not sleep; passed frequently large quantities of urine without consciousness.
On the ninth, all the symptoms gave way; comatose, towards evening slight rigors; small vomitings of bile. On the
tenth, rigor; exacerbation of the fever, did not sleep at all; in the morning passed much urine having a sediment;
extremities recovered their heat. On the eleventh, vomited bile of a verdigris-green color; not long after had a rigor,
and again the extremities cold; towards evening a rigor, a cold sweat, much vomiting; passed a painful night. On the
twelfth, had copious black and fetid vomitings; much hiccup, painful thirst. On the thirteenth, vomitings black, fetid,
and copious; rigor about mid-day, loss of speech. On the fourteenth, some blood ran from her nose, she died. In this
case the bowels were loose throughout; with rigors: her age about seventeen. An ardent fever.

Sect. III

1. The year was southerly, rainy; no winds throughout. Droughts having prevailed during the previous seasons of the
year, the south winds towards the rising of Arcturus were attended with much rain. Autumn gloomy and cloudy, with
copious rains. Winter southerly, damp, and soft. But long after the solstice, and near the equinox, much wintery
weather out of season; and when now close to the equinox, northerly, and winterly weather for no long time. The spring
again southerly, calm, much rain until the dog-days. Summer fine and hot; great suffocating heats. The Etesian winds
blew small and irregular; again, about the season of Arcturus, much rains with north winds.

2. The year being southerly, damp, and soft towards winter, all were healthy, except those affected with phthisis,
of whom we shall write afterwards.

3. Early in spring, along with the prevailing cold, there were many cases of erysipelas, some from a manifest cause,
and some not. They were of a malignant nature, and proved fatal to many; many had sore-throat and loss of speech. There
were many cases of ardent fever, phrensy, aphthous affections of the mouth, tumors on the genital organs; of
ophthalmia, anthrax, disorder of the bowels, anorexia, with thirst and without it; of disordered urine, large in
quantity, and bad in quality; of persons affected with coma for a long time, and then falling into a state of
insomnolency. There were many cases of failure of crisis, and many of unfavorable crisis; many of dropsy and of
phthisis. Such were the diseases then epidemic. There were patients affected with every one of the species which have
been mentioned, and many died. The symptoms in each of these cases were as follows:

4. In many cases erysipelas, from some obvious cause, such as an accident, and sometimes from even a very small
wound, broke out all over the body, especially, in persons about sixty years of age, about the head, if such an
accident was neglected in the slightest degree; and this happened in some who were under treatment; great inflammation
took place, and the erysipelas quickly spread all over. in the most of them abscessed ended in suppurations, and there
were great fallings off (sloughing) of the flesh, tendons, and bones; and the defluxion which seated in the part was
not like pus, but a sort of putrefaction, and the running was large and of various characters. Those cases in which any
of these things happened about the head were accompanied with falling off of the hairs of the head and chin, the bones
were laid bare and separated, and there were excessive runnings; and these symptoms happened in fevers and without
fevers. But these things were more formidable in appearance than dangerous; for when the concoction in these cases
turned to a these cases turned to a suppuration, most of them recovered; but when the inflammation and erysipelas
disappeared, and when no abscess was formed, a great number of these died. In like manner, the same things happened to
whatever part of the body the disease wandered, for in many cases both forearm and arm dropped off; and in those cases
in which it fell upon the sides, the parts there, either before or behind, got into a bad state; and in some cases the
whole femur and bones of the leg and whole foot were laid bare. But of all such cases, the most formidable were those
which took place about the pubes and genital organs. Such was the nature of these cases when attended with sores, and
proceeding from an external cause; but the same things occurred in fevers, before fevers, and after fevers. fevers. But
those cases in which an abscess was formed, and turned to a suppuration, or a seasonable diarrhea or discharge of good
urine took place, were relieved thereby: but those cases in which none of these symptoms occurred, but they disappeared
without a crisis, proved fatal. The greater number of these erysipelatous cases took place in the spring, but were
prolonged through the summer and during autumn.

5. In certain cases there was much disorder, and tumors about the fauces, and inflammations of the tongue, and
abscesses about the teeth. And many were attacked with impairment or loss of speech; at first, those in the
commencement of phthisis, but also persons in ardent fever and in phrenitis.

6. The cases of ardent fever and phrenitis occurred early in spring after the cold set in, and great numbers were
taken ill at that time, and these cases were attended with acute and fatal symptoms. The constitution of the ardent
fevers which then occurred was as follows: at the commencement they were affected with coma, nausea, and rigors; fever
acute, not much thirst, nor delirium, slight epistaxis, the paroxysms for the most part on even days; and, about the
time of the paroxysms, forgetfulness, loss of strength and of speech, the extremities, that is to say, the hands and
feet, at all times, but more especially about the time of the paroxysms, were colder than natural; they slowly and
imperfectly became warmed, and again recovered their recollection and speech. They were constantly affected either with
coma, in which they got which they got no sleep, or with insomnolency, attended with pains; most had disorders of the
bowels, attended with undigested, thin, and copious evacuations; urine copious, thin, having nothing critical nor
favorable about it; neither was there any other critical appearance in persons affected thus; for neither was there any
proper hemorrhage, nor any other of the accustomed evacuations, to prove a crisis. They died, as it happened, in an
irregular manner, mostly about the crisis, but in some instances after having lost their speech for a long time, and
having had copious sweats. These were the symptoms which marked the fatal cases of ardent fever; similar symptoms
occurred in the phrenitic cases; but these were particularly free from thirst, and none of these had wild delirium as
in other cases, but they died oppressed by a bad tendency to sleep, and stupor.

7. But there were also other fevers, as will be described. Many had their mouths affected with aphthous ulcerations.
There were also many defluxions about the genital parts, and ulcerations, boils (phymata), externally and internally,
about the groins. Watery ophthalmies of a chronic character, with pains; fungous excrescences of the eyelids,
externally and internally, called fig, which destroyed the sight of many persons. There were fungous growths, in many
other instances, on ulcers, especially on those seated on the genital organs. There were many attacks of carbuncle
(anthrax) through the summer, and other affections, which are called “the putrefaction” (seps); also large ecthymata,
and large tetters (herpetes) in many instances.

8. And many and serious complaints attacked many persons in the region of the belly. In the first place, tenesmus,
accompanied with pain, attacked many, but more especially children, and all who had not attained to puberty; and the
most of these died. There were many cases of lientery and of dysentery; but these were not attended with much pain. The
evacuations were bilious, and fatty, and thin, and watery; in many instances the disease terminated in this way, with
and without fever; there were painful tormina and volvuli of a malignant kind; copious evacuations of the contents of
the guts, and yet much remained behind; and the passages did not carry off the pains, but yielded with difficulty to
the means administered; for in most cases purgings were hurtful to those affected in this manner; many died speedily,
but in many others they held out longer. In a word, all died, both those who had acute attacks and those who had
chronic, most especially from affections of the belly, for it was the belly which carried them all off.

9. All persons had an aversion to food in all the afore-mentioned complaints to a degree such as I never met with
before, and persons in these complaints most especially, and those recovering from them, and in all other diseases of a
mortal nature. Some were troubled with thirst, and some not; and both in febrile complaints and in others no one drank
unseasonably or disobeyed injunctions.

10. The urine in many cases was not in proportion to the drink administered, but greatly in excess; and the badness
of the urine voided was great, for it had not the proper thickness, nor concoction, nor purged properly; for in many
cases purgings by the bladder indicate favorably, but in the greatest number they indicated a melting of the body,
disorder of the bowels, pains, and a want of crisis.

11. Persons laboring under phrenitis and causus were particularly disposed to coma; but also in all other great
diseases which occurred along with fever. In the main, most cases were attended either by heavy coma, or by short and
light sleep.

12. And many other forms of fevers were then epidemic, of tertian, of quartan, of nocturnal, of continual, of
chronic, of erratic, of fevers attended with nausea, and of irregular fevers. All these were attended with much
disorder, for the bowels in most cases were disordered, accompanied with rigors, sweats not of a critical character,
and with the state of the urine as described. In most instances the disease was protracted, for neither did the
deposits which took place prove critical as in other cases; for in all complaints and in all cases there was difficulty
of crisis, want of crisis, and protraction of the disease, but most especially in these. A few had the crisis about the
eightieth day, but in most instances it (the disease?) left them irregularly. A few of them died of dropsy without
being confined to bed. And in many other diseases people were troubled with swelling, but more especially in phthisical
cases.

13. The greatest and most dangerous disease, and the one that proved fatal to the greatest number, was consumption.
With many persons it commenced during the winter, and of these some were confined to bed, and others bore up on foot;
the most of those died early in spring who were confined to bed; of the others, the cough left not a single person, but
it became milder through the summer; during the autumn, all these were confined to bed, and many of them died, but in
the greater number of cases the disease was long protracted. Most of these were suddenly attacked with these diseases,
having frequent rigors, often continual and acute fevers; unseasonable, copious, and cold sweats throughout; great
coldness, from which they had great difficulty in being restored to heat; the bowels variously constipated, and again
immediately in a loose state, but towards the termination in all cases with violent looseness of the bowels; a
determination downwards of all matters collected about the lungs; urine excessive, and not good; troublesome melting.
The coughs throughout were frequent, and copious, digested, and liquid, but not brought up with much pain; and even
when they had some slight pain, in all cases the purging of the matters about the lungs went on mildly. The fauces were
not very irritable, nor were they troubled with any saltish humors; but there were viscid, white, liquid, frothy, and
copious defluxions from the head. But by far the greatest mischief attending these and the other complaints, was the
aversion to food, as has been described. For neither been described. For neither had they any relish for drink along
with their food, but continued without thirst. There was heaviness of the body, disposition to coma, in most cases
swelling, which ended in dropsy; they had rigors, and were delirious towards death.

14. The form of body peculiarly subject to phthisical complaints was the smooth, the whitish, that resembling the
lentil; the reddish, the blue-eyed, the leucophlegmatic, and that with the scapulae having the appearance of wings: and
women in like manner, with regard to the melancholic and subsanguineous, phrenitic and dysenteric affections
principally attacked them. Tenesmus troubled young persons of a phlegmatic temperament. Chronic diarrhoea, acrid and
viscid discharges from the bowels, attacked those who were troubled with bitter bile.

15. To all those which have been described, the season of spring was most inimical, and proved fatal to the greatest
numbers: the summer was the most favorable to them, and the fewest died then; in autumn, and under the Pleiades, again
there died great numbers. It appears to me, according to the reason of things, that the coming on of summer should have
done good in these cases; for winter coming on cures the diseases of summer, and summer coming on removes the diseases
of winter. And yet the summer in question was not of itself well constituted, for it became suddenly hot, southerly,
and calm; but, not withstanding, it proved beneficial by producing a change on the other constitution.

16. I look upon it as being a great part of the art to be able to judge properly of that which has been written. For
he that knows and makes a proper use of these things, would appear to me not likely to commit any great mistake in the
art. He ought to learn accurately the constitution of every one of the seasons, and of the diseases; whatever that is
common in each constitution and disease is good, and whatever is bad; whatever disease will be protracted and end in
death, and whatever will be protracted and end in recovery; which disease of an acute nature will end in death, and
which in recovery. From these it is easy to know the order of the critical days, and prognosticate from them
accordingly. And to a person who is skilled in these things, it is easy to know to whom, when, and how aliment ought to
be administered.

Sixteen Cases of Disease

CASE I. In Thasus, the Parian who lodged above the Temple of Diana was seized with an acute fever, at first of a
continual and ardent type; thirsty, inclined to be comatose at first, and afterwards troubled with insomnolency; bowels
disordered at the beginning, urine thin. On the sixth day, passed oily urine, was delirious. On the seventh, all the
symptoms were exacerbated; had no sleep, but the urine of the same characters, and the understanding disordered; alvine
dejections bilious and fatty. On the eighth, a slight epistaxis; small vomiting of verdigris-green matters; slept a
little. On the ninth, in the same state. On the tenth, all the symptoms gave way. On the eleventh, he sweated, but not
over the whole body; he became cold, but immediately recovered his heat again. On the fourteenth, acute fever;
discharges bilious, thin, and copious; substances floating in the urine; he became incoherent. On the seventeenth, in a
painful state, for he had no sleep, and the fever was more intense. On the twentieth, sweated all over; apyrexia,
dejections bilious; aversion to food, comatose. On the twenty-fourth, had a relapse. On the thirty-fourth, apyrexia;
bowels not confined; and he again recovered his heat. Fortieth, apyrexia, bowels confined for no long time, aversion to
food; had again slight symptoms of fever, and throughout in an irregular form; apyrexia at times, and at others not;
for if the fever intermitted, and was alleviated for a little, it immediately relapsed again; he used much and improper
food; sleep bad; about the time of the relapse he was delirious; passed thick urine at that time, but troubled, and of
bad characters; bowels at first confined, and again loose; slight fevers of a continual type; discharges copious and
thin. On the hundred and twentieth day he died. In this patient the bowels were constantly from the first either loose,
with bilious, liquid, and copious dejections, or constipated with hot and undigested faeces; the urine throughout bad;
for the most part coma, or insomnolency with pain; continued aversion to food. Ardent fever.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the weakness produced by the fever, the phrenitis, and affection
of the hypochondrium caused death on the hundred and twentieth day.

CASE II. In Thasus, the woman who lodged near the Cold Water, on the third day after delivery of a daughter, the
lochial discharge not taking place, was seized with acute fever, accompanied with rigors. But a considerable time
before delivery she was feverish, confined to bed, and loathed her food. After the rigor which took place, continual
and acute fevers, with rigors. On the eighth and following days, was very incoherent, and immediately afterwards became
collected; bowels disordered, with copious, thin, watery, and bilious stools; no thirst. On the eleventh was collected,
but disposed to coma; urine copious, thin, and black; no sleep. On the twentieth, slight chills, and immediately
afterwards was warm; slight incoherence; no sleep; with regard to the bowels, in the same condition; urine watery, and
copious. On the twenty-seventh, free from fever; bowels constipated; not long afterwards violent pain of the right
hip-joint for a considerable time; fevers afterwards supervened; urine watery. On the fortieth, complaints about the
hip-joint better; continued coughs, with copious, watery sputa; bowels constipated; aversion to food; urine the same;
fever not leaving her entirely, but having paroxysms in an irregular form, sometimes present, sometimes not. On the
sixtieth, the coughs left her without a crisis, for no concoction of the sputa took place, nor any of the usual
abscesses; jaw on the right side convulsively retracted; comatose, was again incoherent, and immediately became
collected; utter aversion to food; the jaw became relaxed; alvine discharges small, and bilious; fever more acute,
affected with rigors; on the following days lost her speech, and again became collected, and talked. On the eightieth
she died. In this case the urine throughout was black, thin, and watery; coma supervened; there was aversion to food,
aversion to food, despondency, and insomnolency; irritability, restlessness; she was of a melancholic turn of mind.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the suppression of the lochial discharge caused death on the
day.

CASE III. In Thasus, Pythion, who was lodged above the Temple of Hercules, from labor, fatigue, and neglected diet,
was seized with strong rigor and acute fever; tongue dry, thirsty, and bilious; had no sleep; urine darkish, eneorema
floating on the top of the urine, did not subside. On the second day, about noon, coldness of the extremities,
especially about the hands and head; loss of speech and of articulation; breathing short for a considerable time;
recovered his heat; thirst; passed the night quietly; slight sweats about the head. On the third, passed the day in a
composed state; in the evening, about sunset, slight chills; nausea, agitation; passed the night in a painful state;
had no sleep; small stools of compact faeces passed from the bowels. On the fourth, in the morning, composed; about
noon all the symptoms became exacerbated; coldness, loss of speech, and of articulation; became worse; recovered his
heat after a time; passed black urine, having substances floating in it; the night quiet; slept. On the fifth, seemed
to be lightened, but a painful weight about the belly; thirsty, passed the night in a painful state. On the sixth, in
the morning, in a quiet state; in the evening the pains greater; had a paroxysm; in the evening the bowels properly
opened by a small clyster; slept at night. On the seventh, during the day, in a state of nausea, somewhat disturbed;
passed urine of the appearance of oil; at night, much agitation, was incoherent, did not sleep. On the eighth, in the
morning, slept a little; but immediately coldness, loss of speech, respiration small and weak; but in the evening
recovered his heat again; was delirious, but towards day was somewhat lightened; stools small, bilious, and unmixed. On
the ninth, affected with coma, and with nausea when roused; not very thirsty; about sunset he became restless and
incoherent; passed a bad night. On the tenth, in the morning, had become speechless; great coldness; acute fever; much
perspiration; he died. His sufferings were on the even days.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the excessive sweats caused death on the tenth day.

CASE IV. The patient affected with phrenitis, having taken to bed on the first day, vomited largely of
verdigris-green and thin matters; fever, accompanied with rigors, copious and continued sweats all over; heaviness of
the head and neck, with pain; urine thin, substances floating in the urine small, scattered, did not subside; had
copious dejections from the bowels; very delirious; no sleep. On the second, in the morning, loss of speech; acute
fever; he sweated, fever did not leave him; palpitations over the whole body, at night, convulsions. On the third, all
the symptoms exacerbated; he died.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the sweats and convulsions caused death.

CASE V. In Larissa, a man, who was bald, suddenly was seized with pain in the right thigh; none of the things which
were administered did him any good. On the first day, fever acute, of the ardent type, not agitated, but the pains
persisted. On the second, the pains in the thigh abated, but the fever increased; somewhat tossed about; did not sleep;
extremities cold; passed a large quantity of urine, not of a good character. On the third, the pain of the thigh
ceased; derangement of the intellect, confusion, and much tossing about. On the fourth, about noon, he died. An acute
disease.

CASE VI. In Abdera, Pericles was seized with a fever of the acute, continual type, with pain; much thirst, nausea,
could not retain his drink; somewhat swelled about the spleen, with heaviness of the head. On the first day, had
hemorrhage from the left nostril, but still the fever became more violent; passed much muddy, white urine, which when
allowed to stand did not subside. On the second day, all the symptoms were exacerbated, yet the urine was thick, and
more inclined to have a sediment; the nausea less; he slept. On the third, fever was milder; abundance of urine, which
was concocted, and had a copious sediment; passed a quiet night. On the fourth, had a copious and warm sweat all over
about noon; was free of fever, had a crisis, no relapse. An acute affection.

CASE VII. In Abdera, the young woman who was lodged in the Sacred Walk was seized with an ardent fever. She was
thirsty, and could not sleep; had menstruation for the first time. On the sixth, much nausea, flushing, was chilly, and
tossed about. On the seventh, in the same state; urine thin,but of a good color; no disturbance about the bowels. On
the eighth, deafness, acute fever, insomnolency, nausea, rigors, became collected; urine the same. On the ninth, in the
same state, and also on the following days; thus the deafness persisted. On the fourteenth, disorder of the intellect;
the fever abated. On the seventeenth, a copious hemorrhage from the nose; the deafness slightly better; and on the
following days, nausea, deafness, and incoherence. On the twentieth, pain of the feet; deafness and delirium left her;
a small hemorrhage from the nose; sweat, apyrexia. On the twenty-fourth, the fever returned, deafness again; pain of
the feet remained; incoherence. On the twenty-seventh, had a copious sweat, apyrexia; the deafness left her; the pain
of her feet partly remained; in other respects had a complete crisis.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the restoration of health on the twentieth day was the result of
the evacuation of urine.

CASE VIII. In Abdera, Anaxion, who was lodged near the with Thracian Gates, was seized with an acute fever; pain of
the right dry cough, without expectoration during the first days, thirst, insomnolency; urine well colored, copious,
and thin. On the sixth, delirious; no relief from the warm applications. On the seventh, in a painful state, for the
fever while the pains did not abate, and the cough was troublesome, and attended with dyspnoea. On the eighth, I opened
a vein at the elbow, and much blood, of a proper character, flowed; the pains were abated, but the dry coughs
continued. On the eleventh, the fever diminished; slight sweats about the head; coughs, with more liquid sputa; he was
relieved. On the twentieth, sweat, apyrexia; but after the crisis he was thirsty, and the expectorations were not good.
On the twenty-seventh the fever relapsed; he coughed, and brought up much concocted sputa: sediment in the urine
copious and white; he became free of thirst, and the respiration was good. On the thirty-fourth, sweated all over,
apyrexia general crisis.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the evacuation of the sputa brought about the recovery on the
thirty-fourth day.

CASE IX. In Abdera, Heropythus, while still on foot, had pain in the head, and not long afterwards he took to bed;
he lived near the High Street. Was seized with acute fever of the ardent type; vomitings at first of much bilious
matter; thirst; great restlessness; urine thin, black, substances sometimes floating high in it, and sometimes not;
passed the night in a painful state; paroxysms of the fever diversified, and for the most part irregular. About the
fourteenth day, deafness; the fever increased; urine the same. On the twentieth and following days, much delirium. On
the thirtieth, copious hemorrhage from the nose, and became more collected; deafness continued, but less; the fever
diminished; on the following days, frequent hemorrhages, at short intervals. About the sixtieth, the hemorrhages
ceased, but violent pain of the hip-joint, and increase of fever. Not long afterwards, pains of all the inferior rule,
that either the fever and deafness increased, or, pains of the inferior parts were increased. About the eightieth day,
all the complaints gave way, without leaving any behind; for the urine was of a good color, and had a copious sediment,
while the delirium became less. About the hundredth day, disorder of the bowels, with copious and bilious evacuations,
and these continued for a considerable time, and again assumed the dysenteric form with pain; but relief of all the
other complaints. On the whole, the fevers went off, and the deafness ceased. On the hundred and twentieth day, had a
complete crisis. Ardent fever.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the bilious discharge brought about the recovery on the hundred
and twentieth day.

CASE X. In Abdera, Nicodemus was seized with fever from venery and drinking. At the commencement he was troubled
with nausea and cardialgia; thirsty, tongue was parched; urine thin and dark. On the second day, the fever exacerbated;
he was troubled with rigors and nausea; had no sleep; vomited yellow bile; urine the same; passed a quiet night, and
slept. On the third, a general remission; amelioration; but about sunset felt again somewhat uncomfortable; passed an
uneasy night. On the fourth, rigor, much fever, general pains; urine thin, with substances floating in it; again a
quiet night. On the fifth, all the symptoms remained, but there was an amelioration. On the sixth, some general pains;
substances floating in the urine; very incoherent. On the seventh, better. On the eighth, all the other symptoms
abated. On the tenth, and following days, there were pains, but all less; in this case throughout, the paroxysms and
pains were greater on the even days. On the twentieth, the urine white and thick, but when allowed to stand had no
sediment; much sweat; seemed to be free from fever; but again in the evening he became hot, with the same pains, rigor,
thirst, slightly incoherent. On the twenty-fourth, urine copious, white, with an abundant sediment; a copious and warm
sweat all over; apyrexia; the fever came to its crisis.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that the cure was owing to the bilious evacuations and the sweats.

CASE XI. In Thasus, a woman, of a melancholic turn of mind, from some accidental cause of sorrow, while still going
about, became affected with loss of sleep, aversion to food, and had thirst and nausea. She lived near the Pylates,
upon the Plain. On the first, at the commencement of night, frights, much talking, despondency, slight fever; in the
morning, frequent spasms, and when they ceased, she was incoherent and talked obscurely; pains frequent, great and
continued. On the second, in the same state; had no sleep; fever more acute. On the third, the spasms left her; but
coma, and disposition to sleep, and again awaked, started up, and could not contain herself; much incoherence; acute
fever; on that night a copious sweat all over; apyrexia, slept, quite collected; had a crisis. About the third day, the
urine black, thin, substances floating in it generally round, did not fall to the bottom; about the crisis a copious
menstruation.

CASE XII. In Larissa, a young unmarried woman was seized with a fever of the acute and ardent type; insomnolency,
thirst; tongue sooty and dry; urine of a good color, but thin. On the second, in an uneasy state, did not sleep. On the
third, alvine discharges copious, watery, and greenish, and on the following days passed such with relief. On the
fourth, passed a small quantity of thin urine, having substances floating towards its surface, which did not subside;
was delirious towards night. On the sixth, a great hemorrhage from the nose; a chill, with a copious and hot sweat all
over; apyrexia, had a crisis. In the fever, and when it had passed the crisis, the menses took place for the first
time, for she was a young woman. Throughout she was oppressed with nausea, and rigors; redness of the face; pain of the
eyes; heaviness of the head; she had no relapse, but the fever came to a crisis. The pains were on the even days.

CASE XIII. Apollonius, in Abdera, bore up (under the fever?) for some time, without betaking himself to bed. His
viscera were enlarged, and for a considerable time there was a constant pain about the liver, and then he became
affected with jaundice; he was flatulent, and of a whitish complexion. Having eaten beef, and drunk unseasonably, he
became a little heated at first, and betook himself to bed, and having used large quantities of milk, that of goats and
sheep, and both boiled and raw, with a bad diet otherwise, great mischief was occasioned by all these things; for the
fever was exacerbated, and of the food taken scarcely any portion worth mentioning was passed from the bowels; the
urine was thin and scanty; no sleep; troublesome meteorism; much thirst; disposition to coma; painful swelling of the
right hypochondrium; extremities altogether coldish; slight incoherence, forgetfulness of everything he said; he was
beside himself. About the fourteenth day after he betook himself to bed, had a rigor, became heated, and was seized
with furious delirium; loud cries, much talking, again composed, and then coma came on; afterwards the bowels
disordered, with copious, bilious, unmixed, and undigested stools; urine black, scanty, and thin; much restlessness;
alvine evacuations of varied characters, either black, scanty, and verdigrisgreen, or fatty, undigested, and acrid; and
at times the dejections resembled milk. About the twenty-fourth, enjoyed a calm; other matters in the same state;
became somewhat collected; remembered nothing that had happened since he was confined to bed; immediately afterwards
became delirious; every symptom rapidly getting worn. About the thirtieth, acute fever; stools copious and thin; was
delirious; extremities cold; loss of speech. On the thirty-fourth he died. In this case, as far as I saw, the bowels
were disordered; urine thin and black; disposition to coma; insomnolency; extremities cold; delirious throughout.
Phrenitis.

CASE XIV. In Cyzicus, a woman who had brought forth twin daughters, after a difficult labor, and in whom the lochial
discharge was insufficient, at first was seized with an acute fever, attended with chills; heaviness of the head and
neck, with pain; insomnolency from the commencement; she was silent, sullen, and disobedient; urine thin, and devoid of
color; thirst, nausea for the most part; bowels irregularly disordered, and again constipated. On the sixth, towards
night, talked much incoherently; had no sleep. About the eleventh day was seized with wild delirium, and again became
collected; urine black, thin, and again deficient, and of an oily appearance; copious, thin, and disordered evacuations
from the bowels. On the fourteenth, frequent convulsions;extremities cold; not in anywise collected; suppression of
urine. On the sixteenth loss of speech. On the seventeenth, she died. Phrenitis.

Explanation of the characters. It is probable that death was caused, on the seventeenth day, by the affection of the
brain consequent upon her accouchement.

CASE XV. In Thasus, the wife of Dealces, who was lodged upon the Plain, from sorrow was seized with an acute fever,
attended with chills. From first to last she wrapped herself up in her bedclothes; still silent, she fumbled, picked,
bored, and gathered hairs (from them); tears, and again laughter; no sleep; bowels irritable, but passed nothing; when
directed, drank a little; urine thin and scanty; to the touch of the hand the fever was slight; coldness of the
extremities. On the ninth, talked much incoherently, and again became composed and silent. On the fourteenth, breathing
rare, large, at intervals; and again hurried respiration. On the sixteenth, looseness of the bowels from a stimulant
clyster; afterwards she passed her drink, nor could retain anything, for she was completely insensible; skin parched
and tense. On the twentieth, much talk, and again became composed; loss of speech; respiration hurried. On the
twenty-first she died. Her respiration throughout was rare and large; she was totally insensible; always wrapped up in
her bedclothes; either much talk, or completely silent throughout. Phrenitis.

CASE XVI. In Meliboea, a young man having become heated by drinking and much venery, was confined to bed; he was
affected with rigors and nausea; insomnolency and absence of thirst. On the first day much faeces passed from the
bowels along with a copious flux; and on the following days he passed many watery stools of a green color; urine thin,
scanty, and deficient in color; respiration rare, large, at long intervals; softish distention of the hypochondrium, of
an oblong form, on both sides; continued palpitation in the epigastric region throughout; passed urine of an oily
appearance. On the tenth, he had calm delirium, for he was naturally of an orderly and quiet disposition; skin parched
and tense; dejections either copious and thin, or bilious and fatty. On the fourteenth, all the symptoms were
exacerbated; he became delirious, and talked much incoherently. On the twentieth, wild delirium, On the twentieth, wild
delirium, jactitation, passed no urine; small drinks were retained. On the twenty-fourth he died. Phrenitis.

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